ISTANBUL, March 17 Islamic cleric Fethullah
Gulen has described a crackdown on his followers by Turkish
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan as "ten times worse" than anything
meted out after coups by the secularist army.

Erdogan accuses Gulen's Hizmet ("Service") network, which
has built quiet influence in the police and judiciary over
decades, of orchestrating a graft investigation which has grown
into one of the biggest challenges of his 11-year rule.

He has responded by tightening government control of the
courts and reassigning thousands of police officers and hundreds
of prosecutors and judges, in what his aides say is a drive to
cleanse the judiciary of Gulen's influence.

In his first major interview in Turkish media since the
graft scandal burst into the open in December, the U.S.-based
cleric, whose worldwide network of followers say they number in
the millions, said he was the victim of a campaign of slander.

"In the wake of the Sept. 12, 1980 military coup, the
authorities tracked me for six years as if I were a criminal.
Raids were carried out. Our friends were harassed. In a sense,
it became a sort of lifestyle for us to live under constant
surveillance in a coup atmosphere," he said.

"What we are seeing today is 10 times worse than what we saw
during the military coups," he was quoted as saying in an
interview with the Zaman newspaper and its English-language
edition, both close to his movement. (www.todayszaman.com)

The accusation is a strong one, given Turkey's history.

Turkey's army toppled four governments in the second half of
the 20th century before Erdogan's Islamist-rooted AK Party
brought a decade of economic and political stability. Rights
groups accused the generals of widespread torture and killings
after coups in 1960 and 1980.

Erdogan, however, has couched the feud in equally historic
terms, evoking the memory of one of his political heroes Adnan
Menderes, a prime minister overthrown by the military in 1960
and hanged along with two ministers a year later.

Menderes eased curbs on religion, much as Erdogan has done,
allowing thousands of mosques to reopen, opened new religious
schools and legalised the call to prayer in Arabic. He too was
accused of increasingly authoritarian rule.

"Back then they called Menderes a dictator. Today they say
the same for me. Back then they called Menderes an enemy of
freedom. Today they say that about me," he told thousands at an
election rally in the southwestern province of Aydin, where
Menderes was born, evoking his memory more than a dozen times.

March 30 municipal elections will be the first test of
Erdogan's popularity at the ballot box since nationwide protests
last summer and since the graft scandal erupted.

Opinion polls suggest his support remains high, after a
decade of strong economic performance, but he will be seeking a
vote for his AK Party exceeding the 39 percent of five years
ago. In this, he may be aided by an opposition that is divided
and lacking clear leadership.

"Either we claim Menderes' battle for democracy or we will
be siding with those who have martyred him. This election also
has such a meaning," Erdogan thundered at the rally.

HISTORIC STRUGGLE

Gulen's network helped cement the AK Party's rise, using its
influence in the judiciary to help break the army's grip with a
series of coup plot trials; but the marriage of convenience has
fallen apart as the former allies turn on each other.

"This time, we face similar treatment but at the hands of
civilians who we think follow the same faith as us," Gulen said.
"I should acknowledge that this inflicts extra pain on us. All
we can do is say 'This, too, shall pass,' and remain patient."

This month's polls are followed by a presidential race five
months later in which Erdogan had long been expected to stand,
although his party could also change its internal rules to let
him serve a fourth term as prime minister, casting his strong
leadership as necessary to finish off the feud with Gulen.

Erdogan has described those behind the graft scandal as
"leeches", decrying what appears to have been the wiretapping
over years of thousands of phones including his own by a
"parallel state" bent on using blackmail to wield influence.

"The parallel state situation, I can say, is a peak in terms
of organising a plot, the peak of all troubles," he told
Turkey's Kanal 7 TV in an interview late on Sunday, describing
it as worse than an attempt in the courts in 2008 to close the
AK Party on charges of seeking to introduce Islamic rule.

"What really troubles us is this: legal or illegal how come
the prime minister of a country is wiretapped? A court verdict
to wiretap the prime minister is out of the question, you can't
do this ... not for the president, not for the chief of staff.
These (people) have become so low, so small," he said.

In his latest headache as he campaigns around the country
for the local elections, a Twitter account behind a string of
leaks in the scandal posted on Thursday what it presented as
prosecution files accusing four former government ministers of
involvement in bribery and smuggling.

Reuters could not verify the authenticity of the documents.
(Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Ankara; Writing by
Nick Tattersall; editing by Ralph Boulton)

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